Hill College
112 Lamar Drive
Hillsboro, TX 76645
COURSE SYLLABUS
Course Prefix and Number Course Title
ENGL. 2323 Sections: 05SB, 06SB, and 07SB
Semester: Spring 2022 English Literature II
Instructor: Dr. Marianna Hendricks
Contact: marianna.hendricks@bisdmail.net or mhendricks@hillcollege.edu
ACGM Description:
Further study of English literature from the Romantic period to the present; selected readings from major authors; emphasis on emerging ideas and surviving influences.
Catalog Description:
Lecture Hours 3 Lab Hours 0 Semester Credit Hours 3
Pre-Requisite: ENGL 1301 (Composition I)
Introduction and Purpose:
This course will provide the opportunity for the student to examine the great works of English literature from the Romantic period through the Modern Age. English Literature II will satisfy degree requirements for Hill College and for transfer credit to senior institutions
Textbook: Greenblatt, Stephen. The Norton Anthology of English Literature: Volume II. Tenth Edition. New York: W.W. Norton and Company.
Supplies: Paper, pens, pencils, Scantron answer sheets as required, examination blue books as required, collegiate dictionary, thesaurus.
Objectives / Student Learning Outcomes:
At the end of the course, the student should be able to
1. Identify key ideas, representative authors and works, significant historical or cultural events, and characteristic perspectives or attitudes expressed in the literature of different periods or regions.
2. Analyze literary works as expressions of individual or communal values within the social, political, cultural, or religious contexts of different literary periods.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of the development of characteristic forms or styles of expression during different historical periods or in different regions.
4. Articulate the aesthetic principles that guide the scope and variety of works in the arts and humanities.
5. Write research-based critical papers about the assigned readings in clear and grammatically correct prose, using various critical approaches to literature.
Description of Institutional Core Objectives (ICO’s)
Given the rapid evolution of necessary knowledge and skills and the need to take into account global, national, state, and local cultures, the core curriculum must ensure that students will develop the essential knowledge and skills they need to be successful in college, in a career, in their communities, and in life. Therefore, with the assistance of the Undergraduate Education Advisory Committee, the Coordinating Board approved a 42-semester credit hour core curriculum for all undergraduate students in Texas, including a statement of purpose, six core objectives, and common component areas.
Statement of Purpose
Through the Texas Core Curriculum, students will gain a foundation of knowledge of human cultures and the physical and natural world, develop principles of personal and social responsibility for living in a diverse world, and advance intellectual and practical skills that are essential for all learning. Hill College faculty periodically evaluates the objectives included in the Foundational Component Area of Language, Philosophy, and Culture.
Core Objective
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College SLO
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Course SLO
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General Learning Activities
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Assessment
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Critical Thinking Skills
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CT1: Generate and communicate ideas by combining, changing or reapplying existing information
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1-4, 8-9
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Pre-writing, brainstorming, outlining, class and group discussion
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Embedded assessment analysis, written essays and research papers
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Communication Skills
Use Any
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CS1: Develop, interpret, and express ideas through written communication
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1-4, 8-9
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Pre-writing, brainstorming, outlining, writing multiple drafts to conclude with a final draft
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Embedded assessment analysis, written essays and research papers
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Communication Skills
Use Any
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CS2: Develop, interpret, and express ideas through oral communication
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1-3, 7-8
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Pre-writing, brainstorming, outlining to conclude with an oral and visual presentation
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Embedded assessment analysis, student presentations
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Communication Skills
Use Any
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CS3: Develop, interpret, and express ideas through visual communication
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3, 7-9
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Pre-writing, brainstorming, outlining to conclude with a visual presentation
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Embedded assessment analysis, power point presentation
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Social Responsibility
Use Any
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SR1: Demonstrate intercultural competence
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4, 5, 6
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Class discussion, student presentations
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Students' contribution to discussion and listening to other students
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Social Responsibility
Use Any
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SR2: Identify civic responsibility
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1-2, 7, 8
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Class discussion, student presentations, community volunteer hours
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Class discussion of importance of volunteering
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Social Responsibility
Use Any
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SR3: Engage in regional, national and global communities
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3, 7
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Use research and blog with students from various countries with varying cultural belief systems
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Embedded assessment analysis and research paper
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Personal Responsibility
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PR1: Evaluate choices and actions and relate consequences to decision-making
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1-9
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Class discussion, writing from a different point of view, creating a cause/effect analysis
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Embedded assessment analysis, cause and effect essay
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The students' success in completing these objectives will be measured using a set of examinations and assignments described, in detail under the section of this syllabus headed “Method of Evaluation.”
An Annual Assessment Plan will be implemented each year to review the course.
Methods of Instruction:
This course will be taught face-to-face and by various distance learning delivery methods.
Audio-visual materials and computer based technology will be used when appropriate.
Methods of Evaluation:
The students' success in completing the core objectives within the Foundational Component Area of Language, Philosophy, and Culture will be measured using rubric, exam, or embedded assessment activity.
Grading:
Grades in this course will be based on the following evaluative criteria:
1. Tests
Tests must be given for each major period studied.
At least four major tests must be given during the semester.
2. Analytical papers based on specific literary works and/or oral presentations
At least two major papers and/or oral presentations should be assigned during the course of the semester.
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- Quizzes/short in-class written responses
The number of quizzes/written responses should be left to the instructor’s discretion.
***Elements 1-3 will be weighted at 75% of the overall grade, but can be distributed at the instructor’s discretion.
4. Comprehensive final examination
***The final exam will be weighted at 25% of the overall grade.
Letter grades for the course will be based on the following percentages:
90-100% A
80-89% B
70-79% C
60-69% D
Below 60% F
Course Outline:
Class policies:
Regular attendance at all class meetings is expected. Disruptions in class will not be tolerated.
Topic Outline:
- Overview to the first thirteen hundred years of English literature
- The Romantic Period
- Historical background
- Early Romantics (selected by instructor)
- Romantics (selected from below)
- William Wordsworth
- Samuel T. Coleridge
- Sir Walter Scott
- Charles Lamb
- George Gordon, Lord Byron
- Percy Bysshe Shelley
- John Keats
- The Victorian Period
- Historical background
- Victorian prose (selections)
- Thomas Carlyle
- Thomas B. Macaulay
- John Stuart Mill
- John Ruskin
- Thomas Henry Huxley
C. Victorian poetry (selections)
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- Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- Robert Browning
- Matthew Arnold
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti
- William Morris
- Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Edward Fitzgerald
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Christina Rossetti
- Francis Thompson
- William E. Henley
- Rudyard Kipling
- Arthur Hugh Clough
- Algernon Charles Swinburne
- George Meredith
- Emily Bronte
- Victorian novels, as required
- Victorian drama, as required
- The Modern Period (selected emphasis by instructor)
- Historical background
- Modern drama: Samuel Beckett, George B. Shaw
- Modern poetry (selected from below)
- William Butler Yeats
- Thomas Hardy
- T. S. Eliot
- Edward Thomas
- Wilfred Owen
- Siegfried Sassoon
- Rupert Brooke
- A. E. Housman
- W. H. Auden
- Louis MacNeice
- Dylan Thomas
- Philip Larkin
- Thom Gunn
- Ted Hughes
- Stevie Smith
- Modern short prose (selections)
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- Joseph Conrad
- Katherine Mansfield
- Virginia Woolf
- James Joyce
- D. H. Lawrence
- George Orwell
- Doris Lessing
- Modern novels (as required by instructor)
- Kingsley Amis
- Evelyn Waugh
- T. H. White
- Alan Paton
- George Orwell
- Somerset Maugham
- D. H. Lawrence
- Aldous Huxley
- Joyce Cary
- Virginia Woolf
Disabilities/ADA
Students with qualified and documented permanent or temporary disabilities may request accommodations which will enable them to participate in and benefit from educational programs and activities. Students should contact the Academic Advising and Success Center for more details at: 254.659.7650 for Hillsboro, 817.760.5650 for Cleburne, or 817.295.7392 for Burleson.
Reports of discrimination based on disability may be directed to the ADA/Section 504 and Title IX Coordinator:
Name: Ms. Lizza Trenkle
Position: Vice President of Student Services
Address: 112 Lamar Drive, Hillsboro, TX 76645
Telephone: (254) 659-7601
EEO Statement
Hill College is committed to the principle of equal opportunity in education and employment. The college does not discriminate against individuals on the basis of age, race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, or veteran status in the administration of its educational programs, activities, or employment policies.